Casting without Considering Appearance

Iím curious how people feel about casting actors with a visibly different ethnicity or appearance from the character theyíre playing. I think itís generally unreasonable for a white actor to play a minority character, largely because of the shortage of good roles for minority actors. (Johnny Deppís casting as Tonto in the new Lone Ranger movie is an exception in my view because Johnny Depp is Johnny Depp.)

What about the reverse situation, when minority actors play white characters? I never saw Robert Guillaume as the Phantom of the Opera, but I assume he was playing the character as a white man Ė if the Phantom is black, wouldnít his mistreatment at French societyís hands partially stem from race prejudice rather than only fear about his deformity? While thatís an interesting story to tell, itís not the one that the playwright had in mind.

Especially in a musical, the audience must suspend disbelief anyway. A good enough actor should be able to master the mannerisms necessary to play Tevye or Henry Higgins or Jean Valjean, regardless of the actorís skin tone. What about if itís not skin color, however, but weight or height or even sex? Would an overweight Phantom be believable running around on catwalks and climbing ropes? How about a 65-year-old female Curly in Oklahoma? I think my head is starting to spin. So have at it, everyone!

It depends on the style of the play. Naturalism tends to demand careful visual verisimilitude, which is only one reason why it's a style we should probably relegate to museum revivals.

Different countries have different racial definitions and histories. African-Americans (including Josephine Baker, Eartha Kitt and numerous jazz artists) have traditionally taken refuge in France because black people were treated better there. (To be an Arab in France was another matter.)

As for Guillaume, I'm sure audiences noticed his Phantom was black, but I've never heard anyone say it was an issue for them. Neither the play nor the character are exactly Naturalistic anyway. Why shouldn't the Phantom be French-African?

In my opinion, if the character's physical appearance is important to the plot, or if it is very specifically stated within the material, then it should be considered in casting. The way people look is a part of who they are. When writers craft characters, I guarantee you they do not do so without considering appearance, so why would we not consider it when casting the roles they write?

Pearl Sun, who's Asian American, was Alice Ripley's understudy on the Next To Normal tour.

"You travel alone because other people are only there to remind you how much that hook hurts that we all bit down on. Wait for that one day we can bite free and get back out there in space where we belong, sail back over water, over skies, into space, the hook finally out of our mouths and we wander back out there in space spawning to other planets never to return hurrah to earth and we'll look back and can't even see these lives here anymore. Only the taste of blood to remind us we ever existed. The earth is small. We're gone. We're dead. We're safe."
-John Guare, Landscape of the Body

White people should play white people. Black people should play black people. Mexicans should play Mexicans. Skinny people should play skinny people. Fat people should play fat people.

I seriously hope this was a joke. By your way of thinking we would have missed out on some wonderful performances by some amazingly talented and gifted people. Two that come to mind: Norm Lewis as Javert and Lea Salonga as Eponine in Les Miserables.

There was some yahoo on here that argued that the black Billy (Billy Elliot) ruined it for him. He just kept harping on it.

The only time I think its an issue is when the show is ABOUT race.

If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it?
These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

I seriously hope this was a joke. By your way of thinking we would have missed out on some wonderful performances by some amazingly talented and gifted people. Two that come to mind: Norm Lewis as Javert and Lea Salonga as Eponine in Les Miserables.

No, that was not a joke. I meant when it is crucial to the plot. No where in Les Mis does it state that Javert or Eponine are white, so those roles can be plausibly played by any race. When it is ironic, that is a different story. Like the white Gary Coleman in Avenue Q: Student Edition. That is laughable. But a white Deloris van Cartier just isn't right.

Why couldn't Deloris be white? Where does it say she has to be African-American? Because Whoopi Goldberg played the role in the film? (Yes I know the lead in the musical was African-American. But, why wouldn't it be plausible for a white woman to play her?)

A white Delores in Sister Act would be an interesting experiment that I'm not sure would work.

The film role was written for Bette Midler. When Midler passed and Whoopi took the role, her one caveat was that she play the role "as written," and not have the character rewritten for a "black actor" (actor, not actress, since Whoopi insists that 'actress' is a demeaning and limiting term). As such, she played the role not as a black person, but as a person who happened to be black- essentially the same way Bette would have played it, but with Whoopi's signature delivery.

By Sister Act 2, Delores was a well known character, one NOT being written with anyone in mind but Whoopi Goldberg. More to the point- they knew Delores was black, and wrote her as a specifically racialized character. Hence, "Sister Act 2" feels like a much blacker movie than Sister Act 1 did, even down to contemporary hip-hop and R&B replacing the soul and Vegas music of the first film.

The musical Delores is even more characteristically "black" than the Delores of Sister Act 2.

The reason I say that a white Deloris won't work is because she is a somewhat well known character from the movies, audiences seeing a white woman in her role on stage might be confused. They will EXPECT a black person. I can guarantee that a SISTER ACT revival with a white Deloris will do even worse than than the first one did.

DramaMama wrote: The only time I think its an issue is when the show is ABOUT race.

I don't know if that's the ONLY time race (or should I say appearance) matters. For example, when the character is a historical figure, such as Margaret Thatcher or Eleanor Roosevelt, it would be strange to have someone who looks really different. A different race would be fine in my view, if the actors otherwise look similar. Many years ago, there was a TV special in which the actor playing, I think, Anwar Sadat, died. They replaced him with a well-known black actor who looked so much like him it was amazing.

Also, it's possible for a show to be about race in a sub rosa way. For example, My Fair Lady is about what makes someone appear to be upper or lower class in Edwardian England. The British would never have accepted a black individual or a native of India as upper class. Race is therefore a subtext. On the other hand, in the recent Arena Stage production of My Fair Lady, Alfred P. Doolittle was played by an Asian actor. It worked, probably because he had a perfect Cockney accent, which telegraphed that he was playing a native-born (white) Londoner. I really doubt that any actor who can't do the accents properly can play in My Fair Lady no matter what he or she looks like.

I recently saw an all Thai version of Miss Saigon.Kim and the Engineer[who played it as a camp fool-not funy to me but the Thai audience thought he was] looked ethnically 'right', but there was no contrast between 'the look' of the other principals--it seemed all terribly bland.I suppose Ellen[?] could have been Thai/Vietnamese in the original but feel you need an all Americian white face somethere in the mix to make it seem believeable--at least to my white eyes.Phantom is next-so wonder what they will do with that-it might be a touring company whereas Miss Saigon was a local Bangkok company.